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Journal Article

Citation

van Dijk PT, Meulenberg OG, van de Sande HJ, Habbema JD. Gerontologist 1993; 33(2): 200-204.

Affiliation

Center for Clinical Decision Analysis, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1993, Oxford University Press)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8468012

Abstract

We analyzed the number and nature of falls in a nursing home for elderly patients with dementia. Staff reported 1,343 falls over a 2-year period in 240 patients, a rate of about 4 falls per person year. The risk of falling was especially high shortly after admission and after transfer to another ward, increased with severity of the dementia and physical impairment, and decreased for very severely demented or physically handicapped patients. Men had twice the risk of falling of women. Most incidents were relatively harmless, but 33 fractures were reported. The most common causes for falls were "inadequate (use of) materials, stumbling, or slipping" (17%) and "gait and equilibrium disturbances" (16%).


Language: en

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